Int|AR: Interventions|Adaptive Reuse Volume 02
Volume 02_ Adapting Industrial Structures
This issue focuses on the challenges of adapting and transforming
industrial structures and sites and explores their important potential
contributions to the built environment through artistic and design
excellence. Starting from Europe, with its long standing record of
sustainable design, to South America, the USA, and to China, where
adaptive reuse is a more recent development.
In this issue:
Editorial
The Climb to Oatman’s Crash Site
MASS MoCA’s Discontinued Boiler Plant
Henry Moss
Seeing through Walls
Road Trip through the Art and Memory of Cultural Spaces
Laurie Stone and Richard Toon
Reincarnation
A Shanghai Slaughterhouse Reborn
Maya Marx
Preserving the Spirit of the Place
La Piscine, Roubaix, France
Carole Aizenstark
Human : Machine : Structure
Dynamic Continuities
Marie S. Sorensen
Toolbox
Adaptive Devices for a Professional Incubator
Eduardo Benamor Duarte and Caterina Tiazzoldi
Dialogue with the Past
Notes on Three Case Studies
Noel Clarke
Preservation through Transformation
The Granary, Philadelphia, PA
Deborah Grossberg Katz and Brian Phillips
Reverse Cultural Revolution
Preserving Bauhausian Architecture in Beijing
Marja (Magi) Sarvimäki
OMA’s Milstein Hall
Interview with Shohei Shigematsu
Christine Rankin and Erin Truax
(In)convertibility and Memory
Conversions of Vienna’s Flak Towers
Markus Berger
On Obsolescent Landscapes
The Quarry Garden, Shanghai, China
Ron Henderson
MUSINGS
An Inconvenient Column
Jeffrey Katz
TRANSCENDING TIME
Zollverein Kohlenwäsche, OMA 2006
Photo essay, Conversion of a coal refinery
into a museum and visitors center
Softbound book, 120 pages
This issue focuses on the challenges of adapting and transforming
industrial structures and sites and explores their important potential
contributions to the built environment through artistic and design
excellence. Starting from Europe, with its long standing record of
sustainable design, to South America, the USA, and to China, where
adaptive reuse is a more recent development.
In this issue:
Editorial
The Climb to Oatman’s Crash Site
MASS MoCA’s Discontinued Boiler Plant
Henry Moss
Seeing through Walls
Road Trip through the Art and Memory of Cultural Spaces
Laurie Stone and Richard Toon
Reincarnation
A Shanghai Slaughterhouse Reborn
Maya Marx
Preserving the Spirit of the Place
La Piscine, Roubaix, France
Carole Aizenstark
Human : Machine : Structure
Dynamic Continuities
Marie S. Sorensen
Toolbox
Adaptive Devices for a Professional Incubator
Eduardo Benamor Duarte and Caterina Tiazzoldi
Dialogue with the Past
Notes on Three Case Studies
Noel Clarke
Preservation through Transformation
The Granary, Philadelphia, PA
Deborah Grossberg Katz and Brian Phillips
Reverse Cultural Revolution
Preserving Bauhausian Architecture in Beijing
Marja (Magi) Sarvimäki
OMA’s Milstein Hall
Interview with Shohei Shigematsu
Christine Rankin and Erin Truax
(In)convertibility and Memory
Conversions of Vienna’s Flak Towers
Markus Berger
On Obsolescent Landscapes
The Quarry Garden, Shanghai, China
Ron Henderson
MUSINGS
An Inconvenient Column
Jeffrey Katz
TRANSCENDING TIME
Zollverein Kohlenwäsche, OMA 2006
Photo essay, Conversion of a coal refinery
into a museum and visitors center
Softbound book, 120 pages
Price: $21.95
RISD Interior Architecture
http://intar-journal.risd.edu/
Today about 50% of the overall US building industry, totaling $50 billion each year, is comprised of the transformation, adaptation or expansion of existing buildings. This journal addresses these issues of adaptive reuse by promoting creative explorations of this subject through exemplary works in which sustainability is one important facet. Its domain encompasses issues of preservation, conservation, alteration and interventions in the field of architecture and interior studies and practice, but also in the realms of urban and landscape design, and their repercussions in the history and theory of architecture, urbanism, art and design. This inaugural issue is a sampling of such explorations within these varied fields.
http://intar.risd.edu/
Today about 50% of the overall US building industry, totaling $50 billion each year, is comprised of the transformation, adaptation or expansion of existing buildings. This journal addresses these issues of adaptive reuse by promoting creative explorations of this subject through exemplary works in which sustainability is one important facet. Its domain encompasses issues of preservation, conservation, alteration and interventions in the field of architecture and interior studies and practice, but also in the realms of urban and landscape design, and their repercussions in the history and theory of architecture, urbanism, art and design. This inaugural issue is a sampling of such explorations within these varied fields.
http://intar.risd.edu/



